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Discussion with Pierre Toure

Pierre Touré element skate

 

Pierre Touré Cuq

 

Meet Pierre Toure Cuq, our friend and artist who recently worked with us for our Spring '22 shoot. Pierre is actively working as a sculptor in Europe and we caught up to chat about his art, his inspiration, and the epic 5 hour long playlist he made for us.

 

 

Element art Pierre Toure

 

1: Hi Pierre, could you let us know a bit about yourself?

 

Hi, I’m Pierre Touré Cuq, I am 22 years old and I am originally from Biarritz, France.   I began doing art in extracurricular art classes at the “Arenes” art school in Bayonne, France. After high school I went back to Biarritz where I passed my first two years of art study before joining the the National School of Fine arts at Villa Arson in Nice, where I am currently enrolled. 

 

 

2:  You  were  born  in Biarritz, on  the  southwest  coast  of France and are  now  studying  art in Nice, on  the  South-East  coast  of France.  The  South-West  and  South-East  are  both  beautiful  but  very  different.  Do  you  notice  this  difference  in  how  people look  at  art and  how they  see  you  as an  artist?

 

It is actually quite funny, because the two cities are diametrically opposed in their styles and their views around art follow that juxtaposition.

 

In Biarritz the landscape is very local and mainly focused toward the vibe of surfing, skateboarding and street art and there is very little room for what we loosely call “contemporary art”. It has an artistic spirit that is more laid back. But it is starting to open up more and more thanks to the initiatives of the Champs Lacombe gallery among others. 

 

Nice is the complete opposite, it’s truly in the world of “ultra contemporary art”, into the “show off” style of the Côte d’Azur for a certain part of the art market there. Aside from that, it is actually  quite open to contemporary art. There are more institutions and gallery spaces there. That reflects quite well the differences between the two places generally. 

 

As an artist, I think it is beneficial for me to evolve in between the two. It allows me to adopt a nuanced way of seeing art. I have a desire to retain my freedom and a certain lightness and to continue doing what pleases me in an attempt to preserve my humility in regards to my work. At the same time I realise that it has to be taken seriously as my work has to develop, renew, affirm and mature itself. 

 

3:  What  made  you  decide  to follow  this  path  to  take  your  work  more  serious  and  when? 

 

It was during my first months at the art school of Biarritz that I realised what I wanted to do with my life. In fact I didn't really know how to use my hands, besides drawing, that is, if we can consider that one can really “know” how to draw. 

 

The teachers at that school taught me an enormous amount of things and passed on a passion to create things on my own. They taught me that art is much more of an open concept than I thought. After my first semester, I told myself that I couldn’t do anything other than this with my life, that I wanted to live it.  During my second year, I wanted to develop my work even more and learn more in a bigger school with new interactions, with a wider variety of people and new ways of thinking about art. It was at that point I moved toward the Villa Arson in Nice.

 

 

Pierre Toure art skate

 

 

4: What  were  your  first  interactions  with  art  when  you  were  a kid?

 

The first interaction that I had with art was in middle school. I had a fantastic art professor who showed us a lot of things; the works of Orlan, Erwin Wurm, Phillippe Ramette, Alfons Mucha and many other artists from different eras and movements. But nothing was a bigger shock than my first visit to the Louvre. At the time, I was so amazed and I still am really. It was later on in school that I began to comprehend that art is very much an open-ended concept.

 

5: Does  art  run  in  the  family? 

 

Not at all. I am the only one who chose this path. My big sister paints and experiments but it’s not her actual job. I was lucky enough though to have a mom and grandmother who would drag us to the museums when we were kids. 

 

 

Art skate Pierre Touré

 

 

6:  How  would  you  describe  your  work? 

 

I see my work as a sort of vessel for the way I perceive the world. I try to create objects while redefining their meaning, in fact I try to create objects that don’t have a meaning. The goal is to open the interpretation of my work as much as possible and to speak to the imagination of the people. There are no set answers to what my work is. It’s my way of bringing the spectator into my universe. 

 

My works are like pieces of a story that everyone interprets and shapes in their own way based on their own references. But my work deals with concepts that are a bit more “meta”, such as life and death, violence and peace… In fact, I play with the dualities that make up our existence to directly involve the people at the center of it. 

 

What I appreciate in all of that is that my practice feeds of interaction. Whether it is positive or negative critiques, technical advice or different sensibilities; it’s a bit like my work doesn't belong more to me than it does to the spectator. I almost consider the views of people who we think of as “non experts” more than those who already have certain knowledge of the art scene.

 

 

 

7:  You  have  started  BOZARTISTES,  can  you  dive  deeper  in to  what  Bozartistes  is, and  how  you  see  it  evolving  in  the  future?  

 

So the Bozartistes project was born from the observation that is very complicated to show and to talk about your work as a young artist. Almost the entire art landscape is occupied by well-established artists. I think that as young artists we have the desire to speak to those of our own generations, as most of us deal mainly with subjects that are rooted in our own generations.   In schools, there are infinite forms and practices, but we are very conditioned by a ‘make or break system’ where we end up by shutting oneself in to try and do ourselves what’s needed to get out of that system. The goal of Bozartistes is to create a platform of visibility, to encourage new initiatives and form the links between young artists, but at the same time with the largest audience possible. 

 

At the beginning, I opened an instagram account (@Bozartistes) all by myself where I would repost certain works. Later, the idea to create new formats appeared. I had neither the means nor the necessary skills to realize this project, so I reached out to my friends for them to join me. Thanks to them, the project has evolved and has become a collective endeavor. We have transformed the Bozartistes entity into an organisation and we hope to develop different projects such as review, expos, meetups etc. to open up our field of action to the maximum amount of people.

 

 

 

Art skate Pierre Touré

 

 

8:  Knowing  what  you’ve  learned  over  the  years,  is  there  anything  you  would  differently?

 

What is cool about this lifestyle choice, is that everything is constantly changing. So I hope that I will continue to learn many things and continue in this dynamic of perpetual change.

 

 

9:  First  5  inspirations  that  come  to  your  mind  (can  be  visual  artists,  music, books, food, places,  video games, etc...)

 

RPG video games in general, like Skyrim, The Witcher, Dark Souls , the Berserk Manga series, contemporary artist Camille Blatrix, the Nintendo character Kirby and Eurodance.

 

10: You  recently  started  an  apprenticeship to learn  to  work  with  marble.  In  these  days  of social  media  and  instant  gratification, digital art and  nft’s,  increased  accessibility  to certain  media  like  photography  or  computer  aided  design,  what  made  you  gravitate  towards  this  medium? What  made  you  think  “ I’m  going  to  learn  how  to  work  with  this  medium  that  humanity  has  been  working  with  for  millennia  and  I’m  going  to  take  the  time  to  learn  it  well”? 

 

Actually, I am very attached to doing things on my own and I feel this need to acquire as many skills and techniques as possible, to be able to develop my work. I primarily do sculpture and for me, it was impossible to continue to try to create a new method of sculpture without learning the fundamentals. More than that, I have always been fascinated by marble sculptures, so it is also a bit of a trip for me to learn how to do it myself. I am constantly wondering why and how these works have always been so powerful throughout the centuries. And for me the best way to understand this, was for me to start doing it. 

 

11: What other young artists should people check out?

 

I am surrounded by a large number of young and talented artists. I invite you to check out their work.   @cleopatre_rchaos, @pauljacquesbogard, @anassal49 who work mainly with paint and try lots of interesting things through editing, animation, fashion and design. Also the work of @alysse.avi et @yamacazanova who break the boundaries of tattooing by integrating it into larger art practices. The work of my best friend @jaytee_r who works in film. The work of @pris.beny, @leonbinz2 et @elie_aussi who I have the opportunity to work and exchange ideas with each day.   Here is a list friends and people who are doing things I like:  @iszor, @franchement_emeline, @bweeeh, @lesbetteraves, @jean___lem, @romainmautes, @ckpucine, @toustranquille, @sharonalfassi, @hostilityanxiety, @discrete_id, @arnica._.montana, @dahlia.k.0guug, @22_processus, @loucoline, @nelloid, @adriendegioanni, @perrineboudy, @kazuo_marsden, @thomas.parigi, @acidattack_, @absolemabsoluxe….. There are so many artists worth discovering.    

 

12:  Could  you  talk  a bit about  the  playlist  you  created,  your  musical  tastes? 

 

My playlist truly reflects how my musical tastes make no sense. There is quite a lot of sad techno from the 1980’s-2000, some metal, ambient, classic new wave. It really is a playlist that demonstrates what I am listening to in the studio when I work. Right now I am really into Eurodance and trance from the 90’s and 2000’s. It’s truly a clever mix of melancholy and high speed. 

 

 

 

Art skate Pierre Touré Listen To spotify

 

 

Listen To Pierre Touré Cuq